Sunday, October 4, 2020

Dalit rape: Why the road to justice is so rocky


Dalit rape: Why the road to justice is so rocky

From trouble with registering FIRs and hostile panchayats to long court delays, Dalit women face several obstacles. Sunday Times does a reality check

Ketaki.Desai@timesgroup.com

04.10.2020

In January, a 14-year-old girl in Kurukshetra, Haryana discovered she was five months pregnant. She had been raped for the last one year by a group of dominant caste men. While the POCSO Act which deals with sexual offences against children guarantees her rehabilitation provisions, she was not given any counselling or a safe place to stay. “She couldn’t have stayed in the village because she was pregnant and it was unsafe,” says Manisha Mashaal from Swabhiman Society, an organisation of Dalit women that helps rape victims and survivors in North India, mostly Haryana. “They kept her for three months in the hospital against her will in a room that was the size of a toilet and she was given no personal security.” The case is still ongoing in court. Mashaal, who has been doing this work for 15 years, says she’s worked on almost 300 cases. Of those, justice was served in maybe 10. Yet, each of those 10 families had to move away from their village as it was no longer safe.

As the family of the 20-year-old Dalit woman in Hathras who was allegedly gangraped, brutalised and killed were told in a video doing the rounds, “The media will leave. Only we will be here with you.” This threat is just one of the reasons why activists like Riya Singh, part of the core leadership of collective Dalit Women Fight, say NCRB figures about assaults on Scheduled Caste women and minors — 3,366 in 2019 — are just the tip of the iceberg. Survivors and families of victims face roadblocks in every step of the process to get justice.

HURDLE 1: FILING AN FIR

“In 99% cases, the police hand over an acknowledgement of a non cognisable offence instead of a FIR under the Scheduled Caste and Scheduled Tribe (Prevention of Atrocities) Act. External pressure is needed in each case at the level of filing a FIR, then again more pressure to get the FIR done under the accurate sections of the PoA act and not the just IPC,” says Singh, whose collective provides legal aid and counselling for survivors.

HURDLE 2: THE VILLAGE NEXUS

Mashaal, whose organisation Swabhiman Society comprises 100-odd young Dalit women, many of them rape survivors, says obedience to the existing caste nexus in the village is a big problem. “Khap panchayats play the role of local supreme courts. When someone tries to file an FIR, upper caste people reach the police station at the same time. The woman’s testimony is often changed while being written down and there is pressure on them to compromise. Victims are often at the receiving end of casteist slurs by police officers too,” the 31-year-old says.

She remembers a 2012 case where a 15-year-old girl was gangraped by 12 people. “Her father was forcibly shown a video of her rape and he later killed himself. She was tortured in court, was constantly told the accused were “bechaare” and was she sure she wanted to pursue this.” The girl, now a college student who lives at their shelter, has forgotten the first 15 years of her life because of the trauma she went through.

HURDLE 3: FILED UNDER WRONG ACT

Rahul Singh, director of the National Dalit Movement for Justice (NDMJ) confirms the struggle with getting FIRs lodged, especially under the PoA act. “Either they don’t invoke the whole act or they won’t invoke the correct sections. The problem with this is if the trial reaches court and it isn’t under the PoA act, then victims won’t get the full benefit,” he says. The act outlines that these cases are meant to go to exclusive special courts and the survivor or their family are entitled to compensation and travel allowances. The investigation is also meant to be completed within 60 days.

HURDLE 4: COMPENSATION DELAYS

Compensation, Riya Singh adds, is a problem they face. “According to the provision, the first installment of the compensation should be provided right after the FIR is registered and the second on filing of the chargesheet and the last installment on conviction. In majority cases, we are able to get only the first installment. That too after hundreds of follow up calls and door knocking,” she says.

HURDLE 5: MISSING LEGAL AID

Cases are also piling up in courts with the pendency rate of cases under the SC/ST Act at 94%. “Even though the atrocities have gone up from 2018 to 2019, the number of exclusive special courts have reduced. In 2016, there were 195 but there were 157 in 2018,” Rahul Singh of NDMJ adds. The NDMJ provides legal aid and connects survivors with special public prosecutors, who are guaranteed according to the PoA act but rarely provided.

Mashaal says she has seen many cases where court-appointed lawyers don’t tell survivors their court dates, and others where the survivor has no idea who her lawyer even is.

Despite the hashtags and outrage over the Hathras case, sexual violence against Dalit women is hardly a new phenomenon. Kalpana Sharma, journalist and author of The Silence and The Storm, an examination of violence against women in India, points out that women have been the collateral damage in feuds between men forever, but this is particularly the case with Dalit and Adivasi women. “The 2006 murder of Priyanka and her mother Surekha Bhotmange is the perfect illustration of this. It was a dispute between men of the higher caste and Priyanka’s own family and their struggle to come out of their poverty. Women were used to show other Dalits that this is what will happen if you lose your ‘aukaat’,” says Sharma. A 1999 Human Rights Watch report documented the use of sexual abuse against Dalit women “as tools by landlords and the police to inflict political “lessons” and crush dissent and labour movements within Dalit communities.”

There seems to be a narrative that positions the caste identity of survivors as purely incidental, yet this is clearly false and myopic. NDMJ’s Singh says, “If you go to villages, everyone knows each other and each other’s castes. The homes of Dalits, Adivasis and dominant castes are separate.” Sharma says of the Hathras case, “It happened because she was Dalit, no question.”

While the Hathras case shares outrage and protests with Nirbhaya, there is a stark difference in the administrative response as well as its possible impact. The response to the Nirbhaya case led to legislative reform, but will the same happen here? After all, if we are unwilling to recognise the problem as what it is, how can work towards solving it? Activists say the first step is just implementing the laws that already exist. Riya Singh says, “Strict adherence to the procedures laid under the PoA act is important. Instead of showing so much outrage, the upper caste folks should sensitise their communities and build a positive public discourse on affirmative policies like reservation that assures our fair representation within systems and right away withdraw their biases towards the PoA act.”

Govt fails to complete probe in 35 yrs, official retires & dies

KIN DENIED PENSION

Govt fails to complete probe in 35 yrs, official retires & dies

Ankur.Sirothia@timesgroup.com

Bhopal:  04.10.2020

In a classic case of administrative negligence, the state government failed to complete a departmental inquiry against a senior officer of the rank of superintending engineer for 35 years, who retired in 1991and later died in 2019. He died with getting his full pension benefits and after his death too, the family is denied of it.

The official got a partial pension for 28 years after his retirement till he died last year. Now, his wife is dependent on his interim pension.

As per rule, any inquiry against a person is closed once he is no more. When the deceased official’s son-in-law contacted the public works department where the official was posted, to learn about the status of inquiry, it came to light that there was no progress.

Surprisingly, the department could not even locate the inquiry file. The matter was taken up with the senior officials in secretariat who assured the family an early solution.

Gajendra Nath Chhokar retired as superintending engineer of the public works department in 1991 and he died in August last year. Chhokar’s wife, Santosh Chhokar, 75, is getting a partial pension due to the inquiry that has remained incomplete for 35 years.

Chhokar’s son in-law, Dr Rajiv Dang, who is a practicing physician settled in Indore, is pursuing the matter after his father-in-law’s death. After running from pillar to post for the past one year and making several visits to the state capital, he has been told that matter would be resolved soon. “I hope the issue gets addressed soon”, he told TOI.

It came to light that the head of department, public works department at Arera Hills wrote at least 15 letters to the PWD department in the secretariat, but it could not help in solving the matter.

PWD deputy secretary Niyaz Ahmed Khan said the issue has been brought into the notice of the government and it would be resolved soon.

The family of the deceased official pointed that the government must take up such issues seriously so that dependents of the ones, who served the government for long, should not suffer due to negligence of government machinery.

GU may hold external students’ exams online

GU may hold external students’ exams online

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ahmedabad:  04.10.2020

Gujarat University (GU) is weighing the option of conducting online exam for external students who are in their intermediate semesters. This was discussed at the varsity’s academic and syndicate meet on Saturday.

“While everyone agreed to assess the academic performance of students by laying 50% weightage on assignments, for the remaining half whether to conduct online exam or assess by performance in the previous semester is something that has to be finalized,” said a GU official.

“A final decision on this is expected to be announced soon. Further, it was decided at the meet to terminate the chemistry professor involved in a sexual harassment case after taking a proper legal opinion,” the official said.

The GU has already conducted exams for the final year students. But it is still to decide about the external students who are in their first or second year of undergraduate courses.

The varsity has conducted offline round of exams for regular students in arts, commerce and science, and law students in two phases, one of which began from September 3 and the other from September 12.

The varsity has, following the University Grants Commission’s guidelines, exempted regular students who are in their intermediate semesters from taking college exams. They have been assessed based on their internal marks and previous semester performances.

Vidyapith looking for new VC

Vidyapith looking for new VC

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Ahmedabad:  04.10.2020

The World’s only university set up by Mahatma Gandhi is now in search for a new vice-chancellor with the term of the current vice-chancellor, Anamik Shah, coming to an end in December.

For the first time, the call for applications, for the coveted post, has most of qualifying conditions set, according to the University Grants Commission (UGC). A threemember search committee, which includes members like Arvind Desai and professor Indira Hirve has been appointed. The Vidyapith officials were tight-lipped about the chancellor Ela Bhatt’s recommendation for the third member of selection committee.

Shah may not get the third extension as per the UGC norms. Bapu was the first chancellor (kulpati) of the Vidyapith and he had held the office between 1920 and 1948.

This time because of the university has adopted UGC qualifying conditions, the race for the post will be narrower. The vice-chancellor should have both academic and administrative experience, should have been on the faculty or board of studies and should have been a member of an academic council or part of professional bodies.

“The candidate, according to the UGC criteria, should also be involved in academic action and research programmes, should have international academic exposure, should have publications in academic journals of international repute and authored books, and even published articles in popular magazines over the past five years, and should also have consulting experience apart from having read books on Gandhi,” says a senior official at the Gujarat Vidyapith.

A house within the premises of Gujarat Vidyapith

Rahul, Priyanka meet Hathras family


Rahul, Priyanka meet Hathras family

We Will Stand By You, No One Can Silence Us, Says Rahul After Interaction

Anuja.Jaiswal@timesgroup.com

Hathras: 04.10.2020

On their second attempt, after a standoff with cops along the state border, Congress general secretary Priyanka Gandhi and her brother Rahul Gandhi were finally allowed to pass and meet the Hathras girl’s family on Saturday evening.

“I am a mother, I know your pain. I have nothing else to say,” Priyanka told the mother of the 19-year-old who had been allegedly gang-raped by four upper caste men in her village a fortnight before she died in a Delhi hospital. The mother broke down. Then, the doors were shut as Priyanka, Rahul and three other Congress members spoke to the family for about an hour. After stepping out, Congress MP Rahul said, “If anyone thinks they can stop us from standing for justice and truth, they are wrong. We will stand by you, no one can silence us.”

The last time they had attempted to visit the family, on Thursday, they had been detained, released and later booked for breach of Covid control measures. On Saturday, when news reached the village that the two had been allowed to cross the Delhi-UP border after police lathicharged Congress workers who had gathered on the DND Flyway, there was a flurry of activity in Hathras. Instructions were shot across to control the crowds expected.

In Mathura, where the Congress representatives had taken a break on their way to Hathras, Priyanka told the media, “I don’t understand why the government is not supporting the family. It is their duty … I have spoken to her father over the phone. I feel his pain.” When they reached Hathras, however, it was only a small group that was allowed up to the girl’s house.

When they left, the girl’s brother told the media that they had spoken about the behaviour of the local administration. “We told them about the attitude of the DM,” he said, referring to a thinly veiled “threat” reminding the family that the media would leave at some point in a video that went viral. After that, the SIT probing the case visited the family to record the statement of the victim’s father.

Samajwadi Party, meanwhile, said it will also make a second attempt to meet the family — the first had been cut short on Thursday — with party chief Akhilesh Yadav expected to visit on Sunday. RLD vice-president Jayant Chaudhary has planned to do the same.

Workers aligned with the upper caste community to which the accused belong, meanwhile, staged a counterprotest near the point of entry to the village. They complained they were not being allowed to meet the families of the accused. “A panchayat was held in favour of the four accused who are in police custody,” a worker said. “We demand an unbiased probe.”


Rahul and Priyanka with the victim’s family in Hathras on Saturday

Varsity Admissions Start, But How To Handle Hostels? Nobody Is Sure

Varsity Admissions Start, But How To Handle Hostels? Nobody Is Sure

Won’t Open Now, Rules May Change

Mohammad Ibrar & Shradha Chettri TNN

New Delhi:  04.10.2020

As universities brace for admission season, what happens to hostels is a question of concern. In Delhi University, hostel admission will not take place alongside college admissions this year. Many college principals don’t see the hostels opening before January next year, but they are certain about having to restrict facilities to meet Covid-19 norms.

Poonam Verma, principal of Shaheed Sukhdev College of Business Studies, which has hostels for both male and female students, described the reopening of hostels as a “challenge”. She said, “Till the time classes continue online, we will not provide hostel facilities. But once the hostels have to open, we may consider converting the triplesharing rooms to two seaters. It will not be possible to give a single room to all students.”

Hindu College principal Anju Srivastava hoped for guidance on reopening hostels from the university authorities. The first disinfection effort will be hampered because of the belongings left behind by the earlier hostellers who had to exit in haste, she said. “For the health and safety of students, we will have to reduce the intake, but increasing hostel fees might not be feasible because of the financial hardship faced by many students,” Srivastava added.

Despite Srivastava’s observation, many believe that the Covid restrictions, especially the reduction in the number of students who can stay in hostels, will lead to an increase in hostel fees. Some college hostels run on self-financing mode and do not receive funds from UGC.

One of those who portends a hike in fees is Venkat Kumar, principal of Sri Venkateswara College, which offers boarding facility for 75 boys and 75 girls. “It is clear that the number of students admitted to hostels will come down. But the full expenses have to be recouped because we have to pay the staff on contract working in the hostel,” he argued.

Many principals are already working out modalities for the reopening of hostels. SGTB Khalsa College has 49 rooms that can accommodate 147 women students, with three sharing each room. Principal Jaswinder Singh said, “Though our hostel rooms are spacious, we may only put two girls in one room. We know the hostel won’t open before January, but we have already identified four rooms to keep inmates in isolation should they exhibit Covid symptoms.”

Shri Ram College of Commerce, which has both men’s and women’s hostels, will receive feedback from students through Google forms. “We want to know whether they want the college to reopen with or without hostel facility,” said principal Simrit Kaur.

Jamia Millia Islamia’s precedent could be followed by DU hostels. It accommodated BDS and physiotherapy students from outside Delhi in the AM Khwaja Hostel, after advising them to reach the hostel six in advance of the exams so they could remain in isolation for the mandated period. “Bona-fide hostel residents were required to carry a recent Covid-negative certificate, and on arrival they underwent the usual checks plus had their baggage disinfected,” revealed Ahmed Azeem, Jamia PRO. "They aren't allowed to leave the hostel except for their exams.”

DU also has a model, having already opened its hostels for research scholars. A 14-day quarantine was made mandatory and hostellers were also asked to limit their time outside of their rooms. The university also asked hostels with fewer residents not to run the messes, but to arrange food from nearby hostels.

Dr KVT, veteran medical trainer, dies of Covid at 92

Dr KVT, veteran medical trainer, dies of Covid at 92

TIMES NEWS NETWORK

Chennai:  04.10.2020

Veteran physician and teacher Dr K V Thiruvengadam, 92, who was hospitalized with Covid-19, passed away on Saturday, two weeks after his wife Dr Malathi died of the infection. The doctor helped establish the first allergy clinic in a government hospital and played a key role in streamlining medical programmes in Madras Medical College.

Known as ‘Prof Dr KVT’ among his students and peers, Dr Thiruvengadam was revered for his dedication in serving the poor while also passing on his knowledge on the nuances involved in clinical diagnosis to his students. KVT, who graduated from Stanley Medical College in 1950, began his medical service at the hospital and later transferred to Madras Medical College where he served as the director of general medicine between 1976 and 1984 before he retired. Many doctors who have carved a name for themselves in the field of medicine were his students.

Diabetologist Dr V Mohan called KVT the ‘teacher of teachers’ who taught his students the art of clinical medicine. “He was an out-and-out clinician. For him, it is a cardinal sin if you don’t examine a patient properly. How to feel, how to palpate, how to observe right from the time a person walks in, the amount of time he would take to examine from the head to the legs, he taught us that art,” he said. “Though primarily his interest was chest disease, he was an all rounder and a walking encyclopedia, there’s nothing he did not know.”

Dr C Rajendran, retired director and professor of medicine, Madras Medical College, recalled how he groomed his students as good clinicians when there were no advanced investigational tools and also inspired them to follow a methodical patient-centric approach. “Those days, we had only a stethoscope, ECG, x-ray and blood test and with that we learnt from him how to make rare diagnosis as well as common diagnosis, which we otherwise could miss. He was teaching till his last day at work,” he recalled.

Dr M Arulpitchai Narayanan, chairman of Arma Medical Foundation, recalled his free classes, always a full house, in the Railway Hospital auditorium for nearly 25 years after his retirement. “The class would have around 150 students, who would attend just to listen to him. He would explain exactly what you see in the textbook and also what happened in John Hopkins in Washington or in Harvard yesterday. He was upto-date with the latest in the field. He was a role model for a doctor and would always talk about the health of people below the poverty line,” he said.

According to Dr H V Hande, he would only take patients referred to him by other doctors at his clinic, where he practised till March before he had to close due to the lockdown. “When we refer patients, he would send back a long letter explaining what the disease is and what should be done. He could spot the disease with precision and with minimum inexpensive diagnostic tools,” said Hande.

KVT received many accolades for his contribution to the field including the Padma Shri in 1981. “He was not only a great teacher and a doctor, but also a loving husband and a father. He was admitted on September 20, a few hours after his wife. His wife passed away four days later, and he didn’t even know. He was initially responding well to treatment, but passed away on Saturday morning,” physician Dr Rawlin Augustine said. KVT is survived by three children.


‘TEACHER OF TEACHERS’: KVT began his medical service at Stanley Medical College, his alma mater

கார்த்திகையில் அணைந்த தீபம்!

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